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Her fate like thine--a ruthless band Hath ravaged all her loveliness. How Athens spoiled thy prosperous land Athenian lips with shame confess. Thou, too, a land of lovely arts, Of potter's and of sculptor's skill-- Thy folk of high undaunted hearts As those that throb in Belgium still. Within thy harbor's circling rim The warships long, with banners bright, Sailed bearing Athens' message grim-- "God hates the weak. Respect our Might." The flame within thy fanes grew cold, Stilled by the foeman's swarming hordes. Thy sons were slain, thy daughters sold To serve the lusts of stranger lords. For Attic might thou didst defy Thy folk the foeman slew as sheep, Across the years hear Belgium's cry-- "O Sister, of the Wine-Dark Deep, "Whose cliffs gleam seaward roseate. Not one of all my martyr roll But keeps his faith inviolate, Man kills our body, not our soul." What America Can Do By Lord Channing of Wellingborough. Lord Channing, who makes the following suggestion to American statesmen, was born in the United States of the well-known Channings of Boston. His father was the Rev. W.H. Channing, Chaplain of the House of Representatives during the civil war and a close friend of President Lincoln. Lord Channing has been for twenty-five years a member of the British Parliament, and for the last three years a member of the House of Lords, having been created first Baron of Wellingborough in 1912. He is President of the British National Peace Congress. To the Editor of The New York Times: As a member of the British Legislature for a generation, and a lifelong Liberal, and having also the closest ties of blood with America, and a proud reverence for her ideals, I would wish, with the utmost respect, to offer some comments on one specific aspect of present affairs, as they affect America, which does not seem to have been marked off with the distinctness its importance calls for. This is the greatest crisis in the history of the world, and attention concentrates itself on the attitude of the greatest neutral State. It is unthinkable that America can divest herself of responsibility for the final outcome. This seems as clearly recognized in America as in Europe. To us in England this war is a life or death struggle between two
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